Ellen Lupton quotes:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
  • Design is an art of situations. Designers respond to a need, a problem, a circumstance, that arises in the world. The best work is produced in relation to interesting situations - an open-minded client, a good cause, or great content.

  • Graphic design is the spit and polish but not the shoe.

  • To say a grid is limiting is to say that language is limiting, or typography is limiting. It is up to us to use these media critically or passively.

  • Think more design less

  • Urban public space is a stage for viewing the field of graphic design in its diversity. A mix of voices, from advertising to activism, compete for visibility.

  • Typography is what language looks like.

  • Design is as much an act of spacing as an act of marking.

  • Working within the constraints of a problem is part of the fun and challenge of design.

  • Letters do love one another. However, due to their anatomical differences, some letters have a hard time achieving intimacy.

  • Are some free fonts a gift to humanity rather than a blight on typographic civilization ?

  • Universal design systems can no longer be dismissed as the irrelevant musings of a small, localized design community. A second modernism has emerged, reinvigorating the utopian search for universal forms that marked the birth of design as a discourse and a discipline nearly a century earlier.

  • You have to be prepared to give creative work 150%. I hear a lot of young people talking about life/work balance, which I think is great when you're in your 30s. If you're in your 20s and already talking about that, I don't think you will achieve your goals. If you really want to build a powerful career, and make an impact, then you have to be prepared to put in blood, sweat, and tears.

  • Design is art that people use,

  • It is easier to talk than to listen. Pay attention to your clients, your users, your readers, and your friends. Your design will get better as you listen to other people.

  • Readers usually ignore the typographic interface, gliding comfortably along literacy's habitual groove. Sometimes, however, the interface should be allowed to fail. By making itself evident, typography can illuminate the construction and identity of a page, screen, place or product.

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share